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ztsx 2 tipsy boaters handed fines in Innisfil
« le: Novembre 03, 2024, 01:18:19 pm »
Uldb Haley became a popular UN diplomat despite Trump policies
 BECANCOUR, Que. 鈥?Quebec provincial police say they aren ;t ruling out a family tragedy as a factor in the death of a two-year-old child in central Quebec.The child was found without stanley cup  a p stanley sverige ulse at about 9 p.m. Friday in an apartment in B stanley mugs ecancour, about halfway between Montreal and Quebec City.The toddler was taken to hospital but later died.               ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                        A 39-year-old woman who was present in the apartment was also hospitalized.      Police describe her as an important witness.        ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 By The Canadian Press Qyut Come back, Donald Trump 鈥?Canada s self-esteem needs you
 For a man of the land, it is  fitting  that the late Tay Valley farmer and conservationist John Miller  stanley cups be remembered by way of a park named in his honour. Its a big tribute to our brother,  said Nancy Miller-Chenier before the start of  stanley taza the ceremony to officiall stanley cups y open John Miller Park near Glen Tay on the afternoon of Thursday, Sept. 24.Another of Johns sisters, Ruth Miller-Baker, pointed out that John was a trailblazer in eastern Ontario, as he was a pioneer in  the no-till conservation  movement ,  she said, which was a way to  cut down on the  amount  of soil erosion.                ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                         Another sister, Diane, lives in Calgary. Johns daughter Melissa lives in Victoria, B.C., with her husband and two children. She watched the ceremony live via a relatives iPhone live stream.  Too bad neither John nor Karen is around to enjoy it,  said Miller-Baker.  Karen died on Aug. 12 at the age of 73.         ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW                                 The park dedication was, in many ways,  a story of the Miller family,  in Tay Valley, said Miller-Chenier, and how they were able to  eke a living out of the rocks, forest and swamps,  of the area.A graduate of the Kemptville college agricultural school, he brought what he learned back to the farm, including no-till farming and tracking breeding of his cattle. He was also a leader, way back, in grain-feeding his cattle and keeping them free range on their 300 acres.